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diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..20fbd2e --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,311 @@ +# nvme-cli +![Coverity Scan Build Status](https://scan.coverity.com/projects/24883/badge.svg) +![MesonBuild](https://github.com/linux-nvme/nvme-cli/actions/workflows/meson.yml/badge.svg) +![GitHub](https://img.shields.io/github/license/linux-nvme/nvme-cli) + +NVM-Express user space tooling for Linux. + +nvme-cli uses meson as build system. In order to build nvme-cli +run following commands + + $ meson .build + $ ninja -C .build + +nvme-cli depends on zlib and json-c + +To install, run: + + # meson install -C .build + +There is a Makefile wrapper for meson for backwards compatiblily + + $ make + # make install + +RPM build support via Makefile that uses meson + + $ make rpm + +If not sure how to use, find the top-level documentation with: + + $ man nvme + +Or find a short summary with: + + $ nvme help + +## Distro Support + +### Alpine Linux + +nvme-cli is tested on Alpine Linux 3.3. Install it using: + + # apk update && apk add nvme-cli nvme-cli-doc + +if you just use the device you're after, it will work flawless. +``` +# nvme smart-log /dev/nvme0 +Smart Log for NVME device:/dev/nvme0 namespace-id:ffffffff +critical_warning : 0 +temperature : 49 C +available_spare : 100% +``` + +### Arch Linux + +nvme-cli is available in the `[community]` repository. It can be installed with: + + # pacman -S nvme-cli + +The development version can be installed from AUR, e.g.: + + $ yay -S nvme-cli-git + +### Debian + +nvme-cli is available in Debian 9 and up. Install it with your favorite +package manager. For example: + + $ sudo apt install nvme-cli + +### Fedora + +nvme-cli is available in Fedora 23 and up. Install it with your favorite +package manager. For example: + + $ sudo dnf install nvme-cli + +### FreeBSD + +`nvme-cli` is available in the FreeBSD Ports Collection. A prebuilt binary +package can be installed with: + +```console +# pkg install nvme-cli +``` + +### Gentoo + +nvme-cli is available and tested in portage: +``` +$ emerge -av nvme-cli +``` + +### Nix(OS) + +The attribute is named `nvme-cli` and can e.g. be installed with: +``` +$ nix-env -f '<nixpkgs>' -iA nvme-cli +``` + +### openSUSE + +nvme-cli is available in openSUSE Leap 42.2 or later and Tumbleweed. You can +install it using zypper. For example: + + $ sudo zypper install nvme-cli + +### Ubuntu + +nvme-cli is supported in the Universe package sources for +many architectures. For a complete list try running: + ``` + rmadison nvme-cli + nvme-cli | 0.5-1 | xenial/universe | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, i386, powerpc, ppc64el, s390x + nvme-cli | 0.5-1ubuntu0.2 | xenial-updates/universe | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, i386, powerpc, ppc64el, s390x + nvme-cli | 1.5-1 | bionic/universe | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, i386, ppc64el, s390x + nvme-cli | 1.5-1ubuntu1.2 | bionic-updates | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, i386, ppc64el, s390x + nvme-cli | 1.9-1 | focal/universe | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, ppc64el, riscv64, s390x + nvme-cli | 1.9-1ubuntu0.1 | focal-updates | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, ppc64el, riscv64, s390x + nvme-cli | 1.14-1 | impish | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, ppc64el, riscv64, s390x + nvme-cli | 1.16-3 | jammy | source, amd64, arm64, armhf, ppc64el, riscv64, s390x + ``` +A Debian based package for nvme-cli is currently maintained as a +Ubuntu PPA. To install nvme-cli using this approach please perform the following +steps: + 1. Perform an update of your repository list: + ``` + sudo apt-get update + ``` + 2. Get nvme-cli! + ``` + sudo apt-get install nvme-cli + ``` + 3. Test the code. + ``` + sudo nvme list + ``` + In the case of no NVMe devices you will see + ``` + No NVMe devices detected. + ``` + otherwise you will see information about each NVMe device installed + in the system. + +### OpenEmbedded/Yocto + +An [nvme-cli recipe](https://layers.openembedded.org/layerindex/recipe/88631/) +is available as part of the `meta-openembeded` layer collection. + +### Buildroot + +`nvme-cli` is available as [buildroot](https://buildroot.org) package. The +package is named `nvme`. + +### Other Distros + +TBD + +## Developers + +You may wish to add a new command or possibly an entirely new plug-in +for some special extension outside the spec. + +This project provides macros that help generate the code for you. If +you're interested in how that works, it is very similar to how trace +events are created by Linux kernel's 'ftrace' component. + +### Add command to existing built-in + +The first thing to do is define a new command entry in the command +list. This is declared in nvme-builtin.h. Simply append a new "ENTRY" into +the list. The ENTRY normally takes three arguments: the "name" of the +subcommand (this is what the user will type at the command line to invoke +your command), a short help description of what your command does, and the +name of the function callback that you're going to write. Additionally, +You can declare an alias name of subcommand with fourth argument, if needed. + +After the ENTRY is defined, you need to implement the callback. It takes +four arguments: argc, argv, the command structure associated with the +callback, and the plug-in structure that contains that command. The +prototype looks like this: + + ```c + int f(int argc, char **argv, struct command *cmd, struct plugin *plugin); + ``` + +The argc and argv are adjusted from the command line arguments to start +after the sub-command. So if the command line is "nvme foo --option=bar", +the argc is 1 and argv starts at "--option". + +You can then define argument parsing for your sub-command's specific +options then do some command specific action in your callback. + +### Add a new plugin + +The nvme-cli provides macros to make define a new plug-in simpler. You +can certainly do all this by hand if you want, but it should be easier +to get going using the macros. To start, first create a header file +to define your plugin. This is where you will give your plugin a name, +description, and define all the sub-commands your plugin implements. + +There is a very important order on how to define the plugin. The following +is a basic example on how to start this: + +File: foo-plugin.h +```c +#undef CMD_INC_FILE +#define CMD_INC_FILE plugins/foo/foo-plugin + +#if !defined(FOO) || defined(CMD_HEADER_MULTI_READ) +#define FOO + +#include "cmd.h" + +PLUGIN(NAME("foo", "Foo plugin"), + COMMAND_LIST( + ENTRY("bar", "foo bar", bar) + ENTRY("baz", "foo baz", baz) + ENTRY("qux", "foo quz", qux) + ) +); + +#endif + +#include "define_cmd.h" +``` + +In order to have the compiler generate the plugin through the xmacro +expansion, you need to include this header in your source file, with +pre-defining macro directive to create the commands. + +To get started from the above example, we just need to define "CREATE_CMD" +and include the header: + +File: foo-plugin.c +```c +#include "nvme.h" + +#define CREATE_CMD +#include "foo-plugin.h" +``` + +After that, you just need to implement the functions you defined in each +ENTRY, then append the object file name to the meson.build "sources". + +## meson tips + +In case meson doesn't find libnvme header files (via pkg-config) it +will fallback using subprojects. meson checks out libnvme in +subprojects directory as git tree once to the commit level specified +in the libnvme.wrap file revision parm. After this initial checkout, +the libnvme code level will not change unless explicitly told. That +means if the current branch is updated via git, the subprojects/libnvme +branch will not updated accordingly. To update it, either use the +normal git operations or the command: + + $ meson subprojects update + +## Dependency + +libnvme depends on the /sys/class/nvme-subsystem interface which was +introduced in the Linux kernel release v4.15. Hence nvme-cli 2.x is +only working on kernels >= v4.15. For older kernels nvme-cli 1.x is +recommended to be used. + +## How to contribute + +There are two ways to send code changes to the project. The first one +is by sending the changes to linux-nvme@lists.infradead.org. The +second one is by posting a pull request on github. In both cases +please follow the Linux contributions guidelines as documented in + +https://docs.kernel.org/process/submitting-patches.html# + +That means the changes should be a clean series (no merges should be +present in a github PR for example) and every commit should build. + +See also https://opensource.com/article/19/7/create-pull-request-github + +### How to cleanup your series before creating PR + +This example here assumes, the changes are in a branch called +fix-something, which branched away from master in the past. In the +meantime the upstream project has changed, hence the fix-something +branch is not based on the current HEAD. Before posting the PR, the +branch should be rebased on the current HEAD and retest everything. + +For example rebasing can be done by following steps + +```shell +# Update master branch +# upstream == https://github.com/linux-nvme/nvme-cli.git +$ git switch master +$ git fetch --all +$ git reset --hard upstream/master + +# Make sure all dependencies are up to date and make a sanity build +$ meson subprojects update +$ ninja -C .build + +# Go back to the fix-something branch +$ git switch fix-something + +# Rebase it to the current HEAD +$ git rebase master +[fixup all merge conflicts] +[retest] + +# Push your changes to github and trigger a PR +$ git push -u origin fix-something +``` |